S
StubbleSpark
Guest
It took me a long time to tell my dad that I had converted Catholic. You see, he comes from a type of Baptist church that is even more southern than yours – Brazil. Naturally, he was floored. It was like a very good joke only the punchline was his beloved son.Originally Posted by ahimsaman72
As a life-long baptist I can honestly say I’ve never heard anyone call a catholic a “non-Christian”. My pastors have always taught that people from all walks of life and many denominations would make it to heaven, including catholics. .
Whether you like it or believe it, my statement here is true, regardless of the link you posted.
“At least I’m still Christian, dad. It’s not like I became a Muslim or something.”
My dad shook his head, “No, I don’t think so.”
Commence over an hour of heated debate over whether or not Cathliocs are Christian. I am not writing this because I was surprised at his answer because I grew up learning that Catholics were not Christians but an old and obsolete form of Paganism. These sentiments are more widely spread in the Baptist community than they are suppressed.
My grandfather was a Baptist missionary in Brazil for over 46 years! He considers Catholics as one of the biggest enemies of the faith next to the vodoo practicioners. I think there have been sufficient posts from numerous former Baptists on this thread refuting your claims that Baptists believe Catholics are fellow Christians. The good ones believe we are. The bad ones do not. But by and large, the bad are in the vast majority and more likely than not the ones leading the flocks. This ugliness is one of the things that drove me from the Baptist faith.
Let’s waste space on this thread on something other than refuting the obvious, eh? You cannot prove your point armed as you are, anyway (ie, you have no objective poll data at the ready or you would have used it by now). And even if you did, that would not change the fact that so many of us Baptists and former Baptists disagree with you based on personal experience.
As Catholics, we get to hear all sorts of horror stories about our shortcomings from all sides of the spectrum. Some of it is just appearances, some of it is an open commentary on the sad state of things today. But trying to deny someone’s experiences falls just short of blaming the victim. Makes me feel all sorta Virginia Woolf-y.